Swap

Swap

The exchange of two securities, interest rates, or currencies for the mutual benefit of the exchangers. For example, in an interest rate swap, the exchangers gain access to interest rates available only to the other exchanger by swapping them. In this case, the two legs of the swap are a fixed interest rate, say 3.5%, and a floating interest rate, say LIBOR + 0.5%. In such a swap, the only things traded are the two interest rates, which are calculated over a notional value. Each party pays the other at set intervals over the life of the swap. For example, one party may agree to pay the other a 3.5% interest rate calculated over a notional value of $1 million, while the second party may agree to pay LIBOR + 0.5% over the same notional value. It is important to note that the notional amount is arbitrary and is not actually traded.

swap

A contract in which two parties agree to exchange periodic interest payments. In the most common type of swap arrangement, one party agrees to pay fixed interest payments on designated dates to a counterparty who, in turn, agrees to make return interest payments that float with some reference rate such as the rate on Treasury bills or the prime rate. Also called interest rate swap. See also counterparty risk.

swap

To trade one asset for another. Also called exchange, substitute, switch.

Swap.

When you swap or exchange securities, you sell one security and buy a comparable one almost simultaneously.

Swapping enables you to change the maturity or the quality of the holdings in your portfolio. You can also use swaps to realize a capital loss for tax purposes by selling securities that have gone down in value since you purchased them.

More complex swaps, including interest rate swaps and currency swaps, are used by corporations doing business in more than one country to protect themselves against sudden, dramatic shifts in currency exchange rates or interest rates.

swap

the bilateral (and multilateral) exchange of a product, business asset, interest rate on a financial debt, or currency for another product, business asset, interest rate on a financial debt, or currency, respectively;

product swaps: individual A offers potatoes to individual B in exchange for a bicycle. See BARTER;

business asset swaps: chemical company A offers its ethylene division to chemical company B in exchange for B's paint division. This enables both companies to divest (see DIVESTMENT) parts of their business they no longer wish to retain while simultaneously entering, or strengthening their position in, another product area;

INTEREST-RATE swaps on financial debts: a company that has a variable-rate debt, for example, may anticipate that interest rates will rise; another company with fixed-rate debt may anticipate that interest rates will fall. It therefore contracts to make variable interest-rate payments to the first company and in exchange is paid interest at a fixed rate. Interest-rate swaps may be undertaken simultaneously on a variety of debt instruments thereby enabling corporate treasurers to lower the company's total interest payments;

currency swap: the simultaneous buying and selling of foreign currencies. This can take two main forms: a spot/forward swap (the simultaneous purchase or sale of a currency in the SPOT MARKET coupled with an offsetting sale or purchase of the same currency in the FORWARD MARKET); or a forward/forward swap (a pair of forward currency contracts involving a forward purchase and sale of a particular currency which mature at different future dates).

Currency swaps are used by firms which trade internationally to minimize the risk of losses arising from exchange rate changes (see EXCHANGE RATE EXPOSURE).

swap

the exchange of a product, interest rate on a financial debt, or currency for another product, interest rate on a financial debt, or currency respectively:

product swaps: individual A offers potatoes to individual B in exchange for a bicycle. See BARTER;

INTEREST RATE swaps on financial debts: a company that has a variable-rate debt, for example, may anticipate that interest rates will rise; another company with fixed-rate debt may anticipate that interest rates will fall. The second company therefore contracts to make variable-interest rate payments to the first company and in exchange is paid interest at a fixed rate. Interest rate swaps may be undertaken simultaneously on a variety of debt instruments, thereby enabling corporate treasurers to lower the company's total interest payments;

currency swaps: the simultaneous buying and selling of foreign currencies. This can take two main forms: a spot/forward swap (the simultaneous purchase or sale of a currency in the SPOT MARKET coupled with an offsetting sale or purchase of the same currency in the FUTURES MARKET); or a forward/forward swap (a pair of forward currency contracts, involving a forward purchase and sale of a particular currency which mature at different future dates).

Currency swaps are used by firms that trade internationally to minimize the risk of losses arising from exchange rate changes (see EXCHANGE RATE EXPOSURE). See DERIVATIVE.

HomeRF is an open industry specification that allows PCs, peripherals, cordless telephones and other consumer electronic devices to share and communicate voice and data in and around the home without the complication and expense associated with running new wires.

HomeRF supports all popular CLASS service features like call waiting, caller ID, forwarding to individual handsets, distinctive ringing, 911 breakthrough and more on an interoperable basis by providing a standard specification designed to move DECT forward to worldwide application with data and streaming media support at 10 Mbps and beyond.

4 GHz frequency band and integrating voice, data and entertainment on the telephone handset, we hope to make HomeRF the worldwide cordless phone standard," said HomeRF Working Group chairperson Ken Haase.

HomeRF is a robust solution within a hotel guest room, meeting room or commercial office suite, but it is still necessary to have either a wired, coax or satellite network to deliver the broadband services within a residential or commercial building.

For these users, HomeRF offers the chance to share resources (printers, scanners, storage devices, Internet connections) without having to go through the upheaval of running cable throughout the whole house.

Bringing not only voice, but data and streaming media over a wirefree connection is where HomeRF solutions lead the wirefree residential market," said Lynn Chroust, Commercial Business Unit Director of Proxim.

Siemens has pledged increased participation and financial support to advance HomeRF-enabled wireless home networking devices and to leverage the recent FCC ruling allowing HomeRF to increase its data and voice transmission speeds to 10 Mbps.

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